Windows 8 and its much needed apology

An apology, at the very least – that’s what I expect from Microsoft. Because that’s what it owes its customers for the misery that was Windows 8, which will be remembered as a failure ever more.

Windows 8 revealed a company struggling to keep up with these touchscreen times. Clearly, heads have rolled at Microsoft HQ, and the newly unveiled Windows 10 is its effort to win back the trust of its customers.

Windows 10, though, not 9? Perhaps the marketing gurus are putting some distance between the new effort, which will be released next year, and the woefully received Windows 8. But as for an apology – perhaps even this isn’t enough.

Free upgrade to Windows 10

If Microsoft wants to truly earn the love of its customers, it could do a lot worse than to make Windows 10 a free upgrade for anyone who suffered through 8. Not discounted. Free. This is something that Apple has managed to do with all of its recent OS X updates, for example.

Let Microsoft pay the cost for its mistakes with Windows 8 – customers shouldn’t have to

What was you experience with Windows 8? Were you happy with Microsoft’s OS or has it pushed you away to other operating systems?

Wow! And so unbelievably good. Now I might sound a tad cynical but perhaps that goes with long experience of software company promises.

” Technology should be out of the way and your apps, services and content should move with you across devices, seamlessly and easily. In our connected and transparent world, we know that people care deeply about privacy – and so do we. That’s why everything we do puts you in control – because you are our customer, not our product. We also believe that interacting with technology should be as natural as interacting with people – using voice, pen, gestures and even gaze for the right interaction, in the right way, at the right time. These concepts led our development and you saw them come to life today.”

A lot depends on whether 10 can be loaded over 7 or 8, or whether it has to be a clean install with concurrent re-installation of everything else. At the moment I am inclined to wait until 10 is out so that I can make another computer to run alongside until everything can be moved over.

This is what happens when you let the over-excitably geeks play on their machines and come up with visionary ideas that have never actually been road tested with ordinary people.

Microsoft locked them up after Vista and thought they had learnt their lesson, showed them Win 7 and said ‘GOOD’ The hairy excitable geeks did not understand this difficult word as it did not form a sentence of 30 incomprehensible words and a Yee-haw!

Fantastic news from MS.( Am sending this on Windows 7 ) but worry that I will not need the upgrade Is windows 10 so very different? When will windows 7 end? Incidentally I think ‘Which computing’ is the best magazine of all- your helpdesk is quite the best thing that is written. But please can you answer the questions put to you in the MS system that applies .

Well that’s a good question, Edward – our thinking so far is that if you are on Windows 8/8.1, upgrade for sure – Windows 10 will undoubtedly be a more user-friendly improvement.

However, if you’re on Windows 7, then you’re already using a straightforward and approachable operating system that will continue to be supported by Microsoft for another five years to come (support ends in 2020). I’m inclined to advise Windows 7 users to stick with what they know and trust already.

However, I wouldn’t be surprised to see new services coming out from Microsoft which depend on Windows 10 to run….perhaps even the new web browser Microsoft is developing, called Spartan. This could incentivise people to upgrade.

Given that the free upgrade option will last for a year from the moment it’s first made available, my advice is bide your time. Stick with Windows 7 initially, and if you get an opportunity to try out Windows 10 perhaps in a shop, then do so – you can then make a call on whether or not upgrading is best for you.

Thanks for the kind words about the magazine and Helpdesk, greatly appreciated!

Rich I agree with the second paragraph . I see somebody going on about geeks well if its to take an interest in the programming and technical electronic aspect then in his eyes I am a geek . This word which is an Americanism is applied in spades to those not of the “all American tough guy personality” well I am big and strong and now old but in younger days excelled in sports so this label doesnt stand up to criticism. I agree that a computer system is good when it works over all devices but if you are the least bit technical minded sticking your finger on a screen doesn’t do it . Win 8 is a flop and -MS,s latest figures Worldwide say that not only is Win XP still got more users than Win 8 it is actually attracting more every day . You do realise that from XP onwards you can do less and less on your PC and that in Windows 10 you will be treated as a- I dont know much about how it works but I dont care . Thats not for me MS from the beginning didnt want you doing anything to your OWN PC it didnt like . Just try in Win 10 to install an app that the IN-compatibility assistant doesnt like you must take a MIcrosoft account if you want to install apps to MS,s PC not a local account and the “”Administrator” account-hidden there is a long list I will not bore you with but in 2020 if I am still living then it will be Linux -Mint . MS continue to keep its source programme secret when there is a multitude of open source programmes the viability of Windows will not last . One MS IT engineer told me “thank God I am retiring I dont see Windows lasting for much longer ” Millions will install it but more and more discriminating users will turn elsewhere.